The Homepage of Stephen Coates

Lincs Amiga Group - 10th Anniversary

October 2016 saw the 10th Anniversary of the Lincs Amiga Group
(LAG). LAG was formed in 2006 by a few former members of the
Scunthorpe Amiga Group (SCAG). To celebrate the 10 years, this
months meeting (number 51), would be a larger 'bash' style
event, in a larger room, with extra displays, special guests, a
raffle, a cake, and more reason for new people to attend.

Approximately 20 people attended, and everyone had an enjoyable
day.

This page contains photographs of the day, showing many of the
retro and modern machines which people brought.

Click on the photos for a larger version.

LAG Members and Visitors playing with their Amigas

Special Guests

Trevor Dickinson of A-EON visited us, wearing his boing-themed
clothes. He's a very enthusiastic guy and was interesting to
talk to.

Matthew Leaman of AmigaKit visited with a table of merchandise.

Nomad

This is the first machine I saw on the day, and has nothing to
do with Amigas! This little machine was built by James aka Haemogoblin.
It contains a Raspberry Pi with a small LCD screen and a
wireless keyboard, in the style of a Commodore SX-64.

Terl

Terl befuddled by the Raspberry Pi.

CD32

The CD32 playing a game:

Myst FPGA Computer

The Myst can emulate a variety of machines. Here it is
emulating an Amiga with a choice of games.

Rockape with his A1200/060

Rockape was trying, unsuccessfully, to access the internet
wirelessly on his A1200.

Naz's A1200

An A1200, complete with a nice Philips CM8833 MkII monitor.

A500 Plus Cartoon Classics

Darren Stevens' Retro Table

Darren brought some interesting non-Amiga gear to show off.

First up, a Memotech MTX512. This is a computer you don't tend
to see very often. It is Z80 based, and is built into a very
nice, easy to open metal case. Darren reckoned it was launched
far too late to be popular. This one had some very well written
manuals with it, as well as some software/games on tape. It
partially worked at LAG, but unfortunately the keyboard went a
bit doolally.

The Hewlett Packard 71B is a handheld computer/calculator. It
can be programmed in BASIC.

The rear of the HP 71B. This one was used by the DHSS
(Department of Health and Social Security) in the UK, and
contains their memory module.

Galaxy Invader game:

Playing a racing game on the projector

eMac running MorphOS

The Apple eMac has a G4 Processor, and is shown here running
MorphOS with Odyssey Web Browser.

Demos running on the projector

AmigaOne X5000

The newest AmigaOne computer, the X5000, on display at the
A-EON and Amigakit stand.

b00zi playing games on the A1200

Mike Clarke (ex Psygnosis)

Mike (on the right) dropped in to talk to us about his time at
Psygnosis. He used Amigas until quite recently.

Vampire upgraded Amiga 600

Apple QuickTake 150

The QuickTake is a mid 1990s digital camera, manufactured by
Kodak for Apple. This one belongs to James. It takes low
resolution photos (by today's standards), and can transfer them
to a Macintosh computer.

AmigaKit goodies

Raffle Prize: Boxed A500 setup

This good condition A500 system, complete with box, and
accessories was available to win in the raffle.